McParland v. Bain

33 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 38
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1881
StatusPublished

This text of 33 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 38 (McParland v. Bain) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McParland v. Bain, 33 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 38 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1881).

Opinion

Davis, P. J.:

This action was brought by the appellant, Daniel McParland, a judgment creditor of a corporation known as the Illuminated Tile [39]*39Company one of the defendants in the actibn, to set aside as fraudulent a judgment recovered against the said corporation by the respondent Dudley ~W. Bain, and by him assigned to the respondent Henry Miller; and also to set aside a judgment recovered in an action brought by said Miller against the said corporation, based upon the judgment so assigned to him, which sequestrated the property of- the said corporation, and appointed the respondent, Samuel F. Prentiss, a receiver of the said corporation. The appellant’s judgment was recovered in an action in the Marine Court. It was duly docketed, and an execution issued thereon had been returned wholly unsatisfied. The judgment in favor of Bain was recovered in this court by confession, an officer of the corporation having directed an attorney to appear and offer judgment under the provisions of the Code, which offer was accepted and judgment entered thereon.

The appellant alleges in his complaint that Bain, for, the purpose of defrauding the plaintiff and other creditors of said corporation, and preventing him and them from collecting his and their claims and demands against said company, by wrongful and fraudulent collusion with some of the officers thereof, or by deception practiced upon them, and for the purpose of fraudulently acquiring the control of the assets and property of said company, fraudulently obtained his said judgment, and that at the time of the recovery of said judgment by the defendant Bain, there was, and still is, nothing whatever due to him from said company.”

He also alleges that Bain assigned his judgment to Miller as security for the sum of about $500, and upon no other consideration, and that Miller received the assignment with knowledge that the judgment was fraudulently obtained, and he alleges also that the property of the corporation was insufficient to pay its debts and liabilities in full, and that if the judgment recovered by Bain is enforced against the same, that the other creditors of the corporation will not receive more than ten per cent of their claims. These allegations were put in issue by the answers, and it was alleged also as a bar to the action of the appellant, that subsequently to the recovery of the judgment by Bain, and upwards'of two years afterwards, a motion was made in the Supreme Court by the corporation, or on its behalf, to set aside the judgment recovered by Bain and assigned to Miller, [40]*40on the ground that it was recovered by fraudulent collusion and deception, and that such motion was contested and finally denied by the court. It was alleged also in bar to the action that in the suit brought by Miller to enforce the judgment and to sequestrate for that purpose the effects of the corporation, the alleged fraud and deception in obtaining the same was set up by the corporation in its answer as a defense, and that upon the trial of the action judgment was rendered by the court granting the relief prayed for by Miller.

“When this case came down to trial, upon the opening of the case by plaintiff’s counsel, the defendant’s counsel moved that the complaint be dismissed on the ground that the facts therein stated did not constitute a cause of action against either of the said defendants. The plaintiff’s counsel then moved for judgment against all the defendants on the ground that the facts stated in their answer did not constitute a defense, which latter, motion was denied by the court and an exception duly taken. Thereupon the court directed “ that the issue raised as to the matter in bar set up by the answer be first tried, it being assumed and conceded for the purpose of such ruling that all the facts and allegations set forth in the complaint which are denied by the answers are, and are to be taken herein as true.” The proceedings on the motion of the corporation to set aside the judgment and the decision of the court thereon denying the motion, and the subsequent proceedings on the appeal from such order of denial to the General Term affirming the order, were then put in evidence. The judgment roll in the action brought by Miller, as assignee of the judgment recovered by Bain, containing the complaint and the answer of the corporation which set up the fraudulent recovery of the judgment and the findings of the court (which did not however pass upon the question of fraud in the recovery of the judgment), and the judgment of the court sequestrating the property of the corporation and appointing the defendant Prentiss as receiver of its property, were also put in evidence. The appellant then offered to prove that on the trial of the issue in this action all evidence in regard to the fraud alleged in the answer was ruled out by the court. This offer was excluded and an exception was duly taken. The appellant was not a party to either the motion or the action, and had no notice of either. [41]*41Upon this evidence the court below found the existence of the corporation as alleged in the complaint; the recovery of the judgment and the docketing of the same; the issuing of execution and return thereof; the recovery of the judgment by Bain against the corporation for the sum of $12,931.53; the docketing thereof; the issuing of execution and its return; the assignment of the judgment by Bain to Miller; the bringing of the action against the corporation in this court in the county of Kings; the recovery of the judgment and the appointment of Prentiss as receiver, and that he qualified and entered upon his duties; that the corporation set up in that action in their answer substantially the fraud alleged in the com-, plaint in this action; that the plaintiff in this action was not a party to that action, and that there is no proof that he had notice thereof; that a motion was made in this court by the Illuminating Tile Company and one William J. Nichols to set aside the judgment obtained by Bain, which motion was denied and on appeal to the general term the order denying the motion was affhmed; that the plaintiff in this action was not a party to the said motion or appeal, and that there was no evidence that he had any knowledge thereof; and, lastly, that for the purposes of the trial of this action it is assumed and conceded that the plaintiff can prove all the allegations in his complaint denied by the defendants in their answer; whereupon the court found and decided as matters of law that the complaint should be dismissed, with costs.

The case was disposed of altogether upon a question of estoppel. It was held in effect by the Special Term that the judgment recovered by Bain against the corporation was conclusive evidence against the appellant, of the relation of debtor and creditor between Bain and the corporation, and that the question whether such recovery was collusive and fraudulent or not, was conclusively disposed of against the appellant, by the judgment recovered by Miller, the assignee, in which the receiver was appointed, whether the issue of fraud then set up in its answer by the corporation was in fact tried or not. This was in substance holding that the appellant in this action was representatively a party to these proceedings, although not in fact so, and although he was not shown to have any notice of their pendency.

We are of opinion that the learned judge carried the doctrine of [42]*42estoppel beyond its legitimate bounds. In Candee v. Lord (2 N.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Frost v. . Koon
30 N.Y. 428 (New York Court of Appeals, 1864)
Candee v. . Lord
2 N.Y. 269 (New York Court of Appeals, 1849)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcparland-v-bain-nysupct-1881.